Category Archives: Faculty News

FMA professor’s Top Secret Rosies wins Fargo Film Festival honor

A film by Associate Professor LeAnn Erickson, FMA, was awarded the Ruth Landfield Award at the 2012 Fargo Film Festival.

The award honors films that profile women of courage, conviction and compassion.

Erickson’s film, Top Secret Rosies, shares the little-known story of a group of female mathematicians who did secret ballistics research for the U.S. Army during WWII.

A letter to Erickson from festival organizer Emily Beck says, “Ruth Landfield was a tremendous advocate and supporter of women in the arts in the Fargo-Moorhead community. The first time I screened your film, I was moved and inspired. I know Ruth would have felt the same.”

Erickson says she continues to travel with the film, including a screening at the Google headquarters in California.

CLICK HERE for more information.

Associate Professor Tajiri to discuss social justice documentary at Smith College

Associate Professor Rea Tajiri, FMA, will participate in a two-day symposium, “Women, Social Justice, Documentary,” March 31 and April 1 at Smith College in Northampton, Mass.

She will be part of a panel discussion entitled “Experimental Documentary: What Does Social Justice Look Like?” with fellow film and video artists Su Friedrich of Princeton University and Barbara Hammer.

The keynote address will feature documentary filmmaker Lourdes Portillo, Las Madres: The Mothers of Plaza de Mayo, Senorita Extraviada.

CLICK HERE for more information.

FMA professor reveals his Oscar picks

“And the Oscar goes to…”

Like millions of people around the world, Film and Media Arts Assistant Professor Mark Rosenthal will be awaiting to hear the end of that sentence Feb. 26 during the Academy Awards broadcast. But unlike a majority of the viewers, he’ll know which nominees have received at least one vote in each category.

He voted for them.

Rosenthal, the only member of the Academy at the School of Communications and Theater, is a screenwriter, with films such as Mona Lisa Smile, Superman IV, Star Trek VI and Planet of the Apes (2001) on his resume.

One of 5,783 voters this year, Rosenthal filled out his ballot during a Super Bowl party this year, fielding commentary from this friends and family before making his decisions. His son hounded him to select Tree of Life as Best Picture, “and then somebody said ‘you’re going to waste your vote.’” Instead, Rosenthal voted for Hugo and will be surprised if neither the Martin Scorsese film nor the silent film The Artist take the top prize.

Oscar voting happens in two phases. In the first round, Academy voters are asked to pick nominees from the list of every film that was released theatrically (there were 265 feature films in 2011). Voters are only able to select nominees for Best Picture and for their area of expertise, meaning Rosenthal also voted for Best Original Screenplay and Best Adapted Screenplay nominees. The second round occurs after the nominations are announced and all voters select their winners in every category.

Assistant Professor Mark Rosenthal, FMA

In both rounds, voters don’t just pick their favorites – they are asked to rank their selections, “so it’s not a winner take all,” he says.

The Academy’s rules for eligibility are quite specific. According to a news release, “Under Academy rules, a feature-length motion picture must have a running time of more than 40 minutes and must have been exhibited theatrically on 35mm or 70mm film, or in a qualifying digital format. Feature films that receive their first public exhibition or distribution in any manner other than as a theatrical motion picture release are not eligible for Academy Awards in any category.”

However, Rosenthal believes that the theatrical release requirement’s end is nearing, as younger viewers consume films outside of the movie theater more and more.

“SCT majors today are probably the last generation with any connection to a movie theater as a sacred place,” he says.

The young movie lovers are more likely to stream films on their laptops or iPads, he says. But a majority of Academy voters watch the nominees at home, too. Studios send out what they call “screeners,” to voters to ensure their nominees are seen by as many voters as possible. “Some of these films only play for a couple of weeks in one theater. Given my schedule, I probably wouldn’t have gone to see them.”

When selecting the screenwriting awards, Rosenthal says he votes for movies he thinks are harder to write. For example, he says he’ll be floored in Bridesmaids wins anything. While he appreciated the humor, “that ain’t writing; it’s sketch comedy.”

 

StratComm professors discuss governmental communications with Guinea official

The minister and chief of cabinet for the president of Guinea was at Temple University Feb. 10 to learn more about managing government and presidential communications from two faculty members in the Department of Strategic Communication at the School of Communications and Theater.

(L-R): Associate Professor Gregg Feistman, STRC; Guinea Minister and Chief of Cabinet Naby Bangoura; and Professor Deborah Cai, STRC. (photo by Ethan Schwartz)

It was part of a two-week visit to the United States as part of the Department of State’s International Visitor Leadership program. Naby Bangoura is traveling the East Coast, visiting universities such as the University of Maryland, Harvard University and Temple.

For two hours, Bangoura, accompanied by a translator from the State Department, met with Professors Gregg Feistman and Deborah Cai. They discussed strategies for managing government communications to a diverse population that has been ruled in recent history by military regimes.

As the theoretical basis for the rest of the discussion, Cai talked about how to build four dimensions of trust and Feistman discussed media agenda setting. Topics ranged from how President Alpha Condé can build trust with people across the nation to how to manage messages across different types of media—some of which are not available to all areas of the country. They also discussed how to manage communication within the government, which has a large number of ministers, and how to encourage pursuing vision rather than reacting to immediate problems.

Professor Cai named editor of IACM journal

Professor Deborah Cai, chair of the Department of Strategic Communication, will serve as the next editor of the International Association for Conflict Management’s journal, Negotiation and Conflict Management Research. She will serve officially from January 2013 through December 2015, overseeing the publication of volumes six through eight.

“As the association’s official journal, NCMR has established itself as a significant outlet for theoretically driven research representing a variety of academic disciplines,” Cai writes in IACM’s Signal newsletter. “It addresses issues of conflict and negotiation from micro to macro levels of analysis as well as across contexts, ranging from the environmental to the political, from organizational to interpersonal.”

Obituary: Gordon Gray, former RTF Department chair

Gordon Gray, a former chair of the Radio/Television/Film Department passed away Oct. 25. He was 87.

Gray joined the School of Communications and Theater faculty in 1967.

“When Gordon came to Temple, he led a department that had built a strong regional reputation under the leadership of Prof. John Roberts,” says former SCT Dean Robert Smith. “Gordon attracted some of the most widely respected senior people in the field.”

The department’s growth under Gray’s watch was immense. According to a quote on the WRTI website, Gray said it grew from 100 undergraduate students to 1,200.

“Our students get a lot of hands-on hardware experience, but knowing how to use the equipment is not all. The camera and the microphone are to RTF students as paint and brushes are to an art student,” Gray was quoted as saying in a Temple University press release.

Lew Klein, an adjunct professor at Temple for 59 years, recalls some of Gray’s accomplishments.

“I believe that Gordon Gray’s success with the development of the RTF Department it attributable to his astute selection of a great faculty and his ‘real world’ approach to the courses offered to the fast-growing student body,” he says. “The years he spent as chair coincided with an explosion of interest in communications and especially broadcasting.”

Under his watch, Klein adds, the RTF saw a heightened sense of congeniality among the faculty and its students. He recalls fondly the faculty-student softball games Gray organized, “of course won by the student teams.”

Klein says his talent and personality will be remembered forever. “Gordon had a golden voice and a heart of gold to go with it.”

 

Assistant Professor Subrin presents films in Vienna and Minneapolis

Assistant Professor Elisabeth Subrin, FMA,  presented her films at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna, Austria, during Vienna Arts Week (Nov. 14 – 20).

Also, for the month of November, Subrin’s film Shulie will be installed in a gallery at The Walker Art Museum, Minneapolis, as part of its “And Yet She Moves: Reviewing Feminist Cinema” series. The Walker has also acquired Shulie for its permanent collection.

Associate Professor Turner honored for service to Temple

By Laura Kuserk
University Communications

photo by Joseph V. Labolito/Temple University

The Office of the Provost and Faculty Senate Steering Committee recently hosted an awards ceremony honoring 17 Temple faculty for their service contributions to their department or college or participation in university-wide activities.

The School of Communications and Theater selected Associate Professor Karen Turner of the Department of Journalism to received the honor.

Speakers at the Oct. 20 event, which was held in Alter Hall’s MBA Commons, included Temple Provost Richard Englert and Faculty Senate President Paul LaFollette.

“This ceremony was a wonderful opportunity to bring together a distinguished group of faculty who have made such significant contributions to their departments, schools and colleges and the university,” said Englert. “Their work continues to strengthen Temple as a vibrant urban university.”

Awards were presented to one faculty member from each of Temple’s schools and colleges. Honorees were given a certificate recognizing their outstanding service efforts.